Patrick Goldstein and James Raineyon entertainment and media

How to get a job as Michael Mann's technical advisor: Be good at armed robbery!

July 2, 2009 | 1:36
pm

When I spent an afternoon talking with Michael Mann about "Public Enemies" last month -- you can see the whole story here -- I asked him, half-jokingly, if he had a technical advisor that helped him with the details of John Dillinger's bank robberies.

Mann is a famously intense stickler for detail. When he shot "Ali," for example, he filmed the scenes of the young champion at home at the boxer's actual house in Miami. In "Public Enemies," Mann shot as many scenes as possible in the spots where they occurred, including the legendary shootout at the Little Bohemia Lodge in southern Wisconsin, which the filmmaker says looks virtually unchanged, the walls still plastered with yellowing Chicago American newspaper headlines from the Dillinger era.

"I couldn't believe it," Mann told me. "It's exactly the way it was back then. We had Johnny Depp in John Dillinger's real bedroom, lying on the same bed, walking past the same toilet, escaping in exactly the same way Dillinger had. It wasn't just out of same slavish commitment to authenticity. It was just that -- you couldn't dream up anything better than that."

Having grown up in Chicago, Mann knows the city's fertile history of criminal behavior backward and forward. But Mann wanted to imagine what it was like inside a bank robber's psyche, figuring that bank robbing was such a timeless endeavor that even a criminal from today would have a pretty good sense of what the experience felt like 70 years ago. As it turned out, Mann knew a guy who knew a guy named Jerry Scalise, a member of the Chicago Crew, a loosely affiliated crime syndicate that has been involved in all sorts of illegal activity in the Second City dating back to the days of Al Capone.

"Jerry is an armed robber -- he once stole the Marlborough Diamond, which was as big as a grapefruit," Mann explains. "He's a real Chicago guy. He comes from the Near Northwest side, what they call 'The Patch.' We met through mutual friends and you won't find a more articulate, well-read guy, especially when it comes to what Dillinger was thinking about when he was pulling all these heists."

So what did Mann learn from him about the criminal mind-set? "I asked him all kinds of questions. What's the high point of setting up a score? How do you go in strong? I'd say to Jerry, 'If you're planning a score, what's the most tense time? The most anxious moment? How do you feel if you're out in the street and see trouble? Or if something goes wrong and you're the lobby man? What does it feel like when you're going inside, knowing the money is there waiting for you?' "

To hear Mann tell it, the adrenaline high is pretty serious. "After you make a big score, you feel like a king. There's no high like it, walking out, feeling all that money, like it's already in your pocket. People who do it successfully never find anything to replace it. I guess that fits their behavior pattern, since they want to score, and then score again, yet they're never self-aware enough to recognize the pathology of it all. But that's what Jerry was able to help me understand, that the whole thing is such a thrill that you just want to have that feeling, right here, right now. You certainly don't ever think about tomorrow."